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Celebrating John Denver!

It is the 66th birth anniversary of singer, songwriter and actor John Denver, who's known for his songs like Country Roads – Take me Home, Rocky Mountain High and Thank God I'm a Country Boy.

Updated on: Dec 30, 2009 05:34 PM IST
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John Denver
John Denver

It is the 66th birth anniversary of singer, songwriter and actor John Denver, who's known for his songs like Country Roads – Take me Home, Rocky Mountain High and Thank God I'm a Country Boy.

Many of the songs Denver wrote or recorded became fixtures in American culture and made him one of the most popular singer/songwriters of the 1970s.

Born in 1943 in Roswell, New Mexico, United States, Denver, the son of an Air Force pilot, wasn't really interested in music until Elvis Presley hit the scene. Denver dropped out of Texas Tech University and moved to Los Angeles, where he took a day job and sang in lounges at night.

During this time, at the suggestion of a record producer, he changed his last name to Denver. He caught a break in 1965 when he was chosen over 250 other musicians to be the lead singer for the Chad Mitchell Trio, a folk group. He toured with the band and recorded the album That's the Way It's Gonna Be with them.

The 1975 pressing of John Denver's Greatest Hits eventually sold ten million copies, one of the best-selling albums in RCA Records' history. That same year, he was named Entertainer of the Year by the Country Music Association. While critics sometimes chided Denver's music and image for being too bland or too wholesome, his popularity soared because his feel-good songs struck a chord with people who wanted music to make them happy. In 1977, he crossed over into movies when he starred with George Burns in 'Oh, God!' in which he played an ordinary man chosen by God (Burns) to carry his message. He appeared in scores of television specials during the 1970s.

Denver's other recordings in that decade include An Evening with John Denver (1975), Wind song (1975), Live in London (1976), Spirit (1976), I Want to Live (1977), John Denver (1979), and A Christmas Together with the Muppets (1979). Denver remained popular in the early 1980s with the albums Autograph (1980), Some Days Are Diamonds (1981), Perhaps Love (1981), Seasons of the Heart (1982), It's About Time (1983), and Collection (1984). The late 1980s presented some difficulties for Denver - he was arrested for drunk driving and his record sales dropped. He devoted himself more to social causes such as Friends of the Earth, Human/Dolphin Foundation, Save the Children Foundation, and UNICEF.

He was also active in promoting space travel, and he was a member of the National Space Institute and the European Space Agency. Denver continued to record and released the albums Dreamland Express (1985), One World (1986), The Flower That Shattered the Stone (1990), Earth Songs (1990), Different Directions (1991), and Higher Ground (1991). Denver always enjoyed flying and was known as sort of a daredevil around Aspen, Colorado, where he maintained one of his residences.

Denver died on October 12, 1997 when an experimental small plane he was flying crashed into Monterey Bay off the California coast.

 
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Catch every big hit, every wicket with Crickit, a one stop destination for Live Scores, Match Stats, Infographics & much more. Explore now!.

Get more updates from Bollywood, Taylor Swift, Hollywood, Music and Web Series along with Latest Entertainment News at Hindustan Times.
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